| Bruce Sterling on Sun, 13 Dec 1998 02:53:04 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Viridian Note 00028: Viridian Gardening |
[orig to Viridian List <viridian@fringeware.com>]
Key concepts: Gardens; aging populations; Viridian Inactivism;
horticulture; allotment movement; urban decay; xeriscaping
Attention Conservation Notice: The term "Gardening" may be
too dull to engage anyone's interests. Presumptuous and
patronising assumptions regarding the tastes of the elderly.
Elements of fiddling while Rome burns.
Links: http://dspace.dial.pipex.com/town/close/xpz05/
http://www.the-hastings.demon.co.uk/herenow/here20/5.html
http://www.slug-sf.org/
http://www.gn.apc.org/rts/sp'96/newsp.htm#G15.7.96
Danny O'Brien remarks:
Gardening is an obvious Viridian pursuit. It's ephemeral; it is a
labour-intensive act that somehow manages to convince its
practicers that they are relaxing; and anyone who has lovingly
tended a compost heap has truly grasped the principle of
"Embrace Decay." For sundry reasons, gardening is also a
massive attention sink for retirees.
Could gardening be tuned even further to comply with
Viridian principles?
The ALLOTMENT MOVEMENT in the UK is a political tradition
dating back to the enclosure acts of the 19th century. After
protests by the suffering working class, concerned politicians
allocated small patches of land that could be rented cheaply by
dispossessed commoners. These smallholdings still exist today
== they're generally hidden away in urban areas, are around 30-
300 square yards per plot, and are supplied with water and
supplies for growing foodstuffs.
They've recently enjoyed a boom that tracks the ageing of the
British population.
http://dspace.dial.pipex.com/town/close/xpz05/
http://www.the-hastings.demon.co.uk/herenow/here20/5.html
(good Viridian URL, that)
Encouraging gardening to spill out from the private gardens
of the gated aged, and into small micro-plots scattered across
urban environments, would provide a number of advantages:
* Conspicuous conservation
* Personal stewardship of public space, which looks to be a
Viridian meme
* Prevents the isolation of the affluent, powerful older age
groups
* Useful as a reinforcer of climate indicators: a sparse network
of small plots, provided with enough amateur sensors (human
eyes and ears, even), would provide a useful set of local
pollution sensors as well as re-enforcing climate change
indicators to its patrons.
As it is, both the allotment movement and the nearest
equivalent I can discover in the US, the Urban Gardening
movement (http://www.slug-sf.org/), suffer from one major
limitation. They're both, currently, chokingly dull. The whole
topic stinks of granola.
May I suggest an investigation into the possibilities of a
mutated Allotment movement: namely, Guerrilla Gardening
(alternate titles: Biosquatting, Random Acts of Forestation).
This would involve small groups of Viridian non-activists
selecting a disused location, and targetting it as their
"allotment." The organisation of the gardeners would be as a
paramilitary cell: individual members of the cell would not
necessarily know the identities of other members, nor how
many plots were in existence. Tasks would be minimal: work
would be shared between enough inactivists for it to demand
little, and degrade gracefully if apathy killed off a chunk of the
participants.
All they would see is that, for minimal involvement, an area
of the public landscape would go from a barren lot to blooming
greenery. And, of course, with some suitable appearance of "Big
Mike," the area would also become an advertisement for the
Viridian movement.
The unofficial tending of a public space may well lend itself
to decentralised management, with limited involvement by the
forces of law-enforcement, while nonetheless carrying the
cachet of an illicit prank.
*********************************
Why "Guerrilla Gardening" is Not Viridian
*********************************
The gardening instinct among senior citizens is already
super-served by their own fine gardens.
"Guerrilla" element unashamedly stolen from youth
movements
(http://www.gn.apc.org/rts/sp'96/newsp.htm#G15.7.96).
The tacit encouragement of unrestricted bioengineering may
be contrary to Viridian precepts.
Recreational fiddling with fringes of urban ecology may be
poor use of time and attention. The revitalisation of the urban
center is a "problem" that may have already bottomed-out in
developed countries. Developing countries may lack the
necessary affluent, aged, middle class. It might be better to
explore other potential horticultural extensions.
(((Bruce Sterling remarks: I concur that gardening sounds
mighty dull, but trying to jazz it up by making gardening illegal
merely attracts the kind of sad yahoo who is reflexively
fascinated by anything illegal. If anyone is going to form
militarized cells and throw weed seeds around, it ought to be
*cops and soldiers.* Cops in particular frequently find
themselves tagging shooting victims in vacant urban lots. If
they had a packet of mixed local wildflower seeds on their
utility belt along with the baton and pepper-gas, they could do a
lot of good over a multi-year period.
(((There is a deeper Viridian aesthetic issue here. In America
in particular, most people have no idea what the native
vegetation of their area looks like. Instead, they try
desperately to re-create the rolled lawns of Britain on the soil
of an alien continent, despite the grim fact that this involves
huge energy-consuming subsidies of fertilizer, water,
notoriously polluting lawnmower engines, and so forth. This
highly counterproductive activity really should be made illegal.
(((Of course, if you simply abandon your American lawn
through complete inactivism, you will find it taken over by
alien invader weed species, most of which are of Asian and
European origin. These species may be even more noxious than
the original monocultured lawn. But xeriscape groups are
flourishing among the wealthy-aged demographic, and it is in
fact still possible to restore whatever small landscape you
possess to a tamer mimicry of the original pre-Colombian
landscape (minus the many wild species that sting, scratch and
stink). A pocket of biodiversity soon sets in. You find the
place swarming with butterflies, beetles, small birds and so
forth. Replacing fuel-supported, bland monoculture with
colorful, insect-rich, inactivist biodiversity is an intrinsically
laudable act. We certainly must declare this activity 'very
Viridian.' Weirdly, in many urban areas, natural xeriscaping is,
in fact, illegal. Imagine the cachet and the illicit thrill!
(((Unfortunately, given trends in climate change, natural
xeriscaping may become impossible. Colorful, exquisitely
adapted, original native plants will no longer be able to thrive in
their original biomes, because they'll die from the Greenhouse
heat. Once can then imagine a future gardening movement,
probably government-mandated, that methodically replants all
urban areas with natural species that had formerly existed
*many hundreds of miles to the south.* Farfetched? People
are harvesting bananas in Austin this winter.)))
Danny O'Brien (danny@spesh.com*)
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